That governor that distributed Tricycle ambulance, I'm pretty sure that there is a vehicle in his fleet that is alone worth more than the entire triambulance distributed.
Nigeria just took a $1.5 billion loan that came with a hidden trap. The UAE can call it in anytime the Naira drops, forcing Nigeria to drain its reserves and leave the economy gasping. The UAE has a history of taking African land and resources. Tinubu just handed them the key.
This country operates a Treasury Single Account (TSA). The Office of the Accountant-General operates under the supervision of the Federal Ministry of Finance.
The accountant-General cannot open any bank accounts without express approval from the minister of finance & the minister of finance also needs approval from the President.
God Abeg!!
The USA "confiscated" 5.49 billion in Venezuelan oil revenues in 2025. Another 30 billion in assets were "frozen" earlier. And now Washington is offering 150 million in aid. It seems like a mockery.
Venezuela is deprived of its own resources. Its money is in American banks, while its people are dying under the rubble. Sanctions and freezes are not tools of pressure. They are instruments of citizen destruction.
Ambulances are built for speed because every second wasted can cost a life. But in the glorious year 2026, our governors are parading Keke as ambulances. This country mehn.
We will tell you who is benefiting from keeping fuel prices where they are, and how.
Dangote Refinery benefits by keeping its price high, which helps keep fuel prices high across Nigeria, even as global oil prices fall.
Fuel depot owners benefit by buying fuel more cheaply and selling it at much higher prices.
Major filling stations benefit by keeping pump prices high and making large profits on every litre Nigerians buy.
The government benefits by claiming the market is "deregulated", allowing them to avoid doing their job.
I teach in a school with only four classrooms. In fact, none of the villages around the one where I teach has a school with six classrooms to accommodate Primary 1–6.
Yet the Federal Government wants us to accommodate students all the way to SS3. Guess what? Kaduna State is one of the better-performing states when it comes to education in Nigeria.
Let me surprise you: there isn’t a single state in Nigeria with the infrastructure to run this new system. Absolutely none.
A group of people who have never taught in a primary or secondary school wake up, realize that many students drop out during the transition from primary to secondary school, and conclude, ‘Oh, easy solution, let’s merge them.”
Then, if you speak up, one fool tells you that a survey was conducted on social media.
Meanwhile, there are people with firsthand knowledge: teachers who have spent 20 or 30 years in the classroom, teachers who have taught in both primary and secondary schools, and teachers who have worked in both urban and rural communities. I’m confident none of them would suggest this nonsense.
The infrastructure deficit alone makes it impossible.
Anyone with skin in the game knows the real problems: poor infrastructure, a shortage of qualified teachers, poor teacher welfare and low salaries, frequent policy changes with weak implementation, overcrowded classrooms, poor supervision, and a lack of teaching and learning materials.
These are the things that are wrong with Nigeria’s education system.
But if you want to know why students drop out of school, the answer is simple: poverty. No parent wants to raise an uneducated child.
Many of these children have to contribute to the family’s income. In fact, forget the family, some of them have to fend for themselves. You need to eat before you can go to school.
Child labour isn’t even the right description anymore. Many Nigerian children are forced into adult responsibilities long before they graduate from primary school.
The government should look inward, free Nigerians from the shackles of poverty, and see whether their children will still drop out of school.
Food needs to be so abundant, that it drives prices down to the bottom.
This means that farmers have to multiply their output
In other words MECHANIZATION.
But also processing capacity, cold storage, logistics, etc.
Food security MUST BE INTENTIONAL
The military drills was the first time some people learned discipline in their lives.
They should have kept it.
Or scrap the entire thing and introduce a 1 year compulsory actual military service.
42 children have spent 42 days in terrorists' dens.
Another set has been kidnapped. Borno state is in a state of emergency and the government refuses to acknowledge it.
Take any population on earth.
For several generations, remove their most physically capable members by force and sell them abroad.
Destroy their existing political institutions and replace them with administrative structures designed to extract rather than develop.
Draw their borders to maximize ethnic conflict and minimize political coherence.
Extract their mineral and agricultural wealth for a century at prices you set unilaterally.
When you leave, install governments that serve your economic interests rather than their populations.
Fund civil wars when those governments are threatened by leaders who want to redirect resource revenues toward domestic development.
Then, three generations later, administer a cognitive test.
Compare the scores to those of the populations who spent the same period accumulating capital, building universities, developing public health infrastructure, and compounding the advantages of political stability.
Put the results on a map.
Call the map a "nature documentary."
Tell yourself the scores show something biological.
Tell yourself the history had nothing to do with it.
Tell yourself you arrived at this conclusion by following the evidence.
You did not follow the evidence.
You followed the map to the place you had already decided to go.
And the evidence, the entire, documented, sourced, cross-disciplinary evidence, is the invoice you refused to open.
Buhari borrowed $1 billion loan to fund the rehabilitation of Port Harcourt Refinery.
That loan was backed by a pledge of 67,000 barrels of crude oil per day & repayment started in 2024, with maturity in June 2029.
What this means is that we are using crude oil to repay loan for a non-functional refinery till 2029.
- Where’s Buhari today?
- Where’s Port Harcourt refinery?
We had educated Northerners who justified almajiri street begging in order defend Buhari;
Today, Yoruba PhD holders are defending frying akara as an empowerment scheme
Obi came from nowhere and became a saint overnight according to his tribesmen.
Nigerians are terribles bigots
See, give Nigerian children education. I beg you. Forget handouts. Forget everything else. Let’s have a proper blueprint for quality primary and secondary education and actually execute it.
Everything else will fall into place. The only thing that truly liberates the poor is education.
We can’t hand our way out of illiteracy and poverty.
This is why insecurity has plagued every part of the country.
For the sake of argument, let’s agree that giving people 50k or 100k to start a small business is a good idea. But that also means their children and grandchildren may end up doing the same business. Is that really what we want as a country?
Forget social media for a moment. Go to the nearest primary or secondary school in your area, and I promise you’ll cry.
We have students in secondary school who can’t write their own names.
You see governors boasting about their state’s WAEC and NECO pass rates, yet those same states are filled to the brim with miracle centres.
In fact, what am I even saying? When last did you meet someone who failed WAEC or NECO? Even government schools have become miracle centres. Schools literally write answers on the board for students to copy. When supervisors come, they are given 10k–30, and that’s the end of it.
Nigeria’s education system is dead. You go to NYSC camp and meet graduates who can’t write a single correct sentence to save their lives.
We’re in big trouble.
Do you know there’s something called “destabilization campaign,” usually used by foreign intelligence agencies like the CIA, against governments that oppose U.S. political and economic interests?
Let me know if you find any of these methods familiar 😉
1. Propaganda and Disinformation: Funding and managing media networks, planting stories, and running psychological operations (PSYOPs) to sway public opinion against the sitting government.
Say me hi to your media houses.
2. Economic Sabotage: Restricting international loans, orchestrating boycotts, and inducing labor strikes to cripple the target nation's economy and create domestic unrest.
3. Political Interference: Funding, training, and organizing opposition political parties, anti-government student movements, and non-governmental organizations (NGOs).
4. Paramilitary Operations: Equipping, financing, and advising militant factions, insurgents, or sympathetic military leaders to execute regime change.
Yea, the CIA claims they’re no longer into regime change operations so it might just be coincidence that some of the above listed operations have been seen in certain countries recently.
Disclaimer: I think I’m coming down with malaria so don’t take my word for it.